Deccan Chronicle

CHINA’S PORT SHUTDOWN RAISES FEARS OF CLOSURES WORLDWIDE

- JOE DEAUX & ANN KOH

A Covid outbreak that has partially shut one of the world's busiest container ports is heightenin­g concerns that the rapid spread of the delta variant will lead to a repeat of last year's shipping nightmares.

The Port of Los Angeles, which saw its volumes dip because of a June Covid outbreak at the Yantian port in China, is bracing for another potential decline because of the latest shutdown at the Ningbo-Zhoushan port in China, a spokesman said. Anton Posner, CEO of supply-chain management company Mercury Resources, said that many companies chartering ships are already adding Covid contract clauses as insurance so they won't have to pay for stranded ships.

It seemed as if things were just starting to calm down, "and we're now into delta delays," Emmanouil Xidias, partner at Ifchor North America LLC, said in a phone interview. "You're going to have a secondary hit."

The shutdown at Ningbo-Zhoushan is raising fears that ports around the world will soon face the same kind of outbreaks and Covid restrictio­ns that slowed the flows of everything from perishable food to electronic­s last year as the pandemic took hold. Infections are threatenin­g to spread at docks just as the world's shipping system is already struggling to handle unpreceden­ted demand with economies reopening and manufactur­ing picking up.

Ningbo-Zhoushan Port said in a statement late Thursday that all other terminals aside from Meishan have been operating normally. The port is negotiatin­g with shipping companies, directing them to other terminals, and releasing informatio­n on a real-time data platform, it said.—Bloomberg

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